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Tuesday, 11 December 2012

Narrative and Purpose

Narrative:

The Cast Study House Program was a product of concerns regarding
where domestic housing was headed after the war. Designs for Postwar Living was a competition held in 1943 when
development of housing ceased due to the nation’s involvement in the war. The production of the Model-T, Highway
Defense Act, opening of the first grocery store and the emergence of the
general assembly line all pointed at a future made for the masses versus the
select. The competition was a response to the evident incoming influx of post
war housing demand due to the advent of the middle class. Instead of continuing
with competitions Entenza decided on a more concentrated program of
constructing houses to provide opportunities for talented architects to imagine,
design and construct the ideal home for a postwar middle class American family.
The Eames House was one of the evangelized houses to promote the new modernist philosophy
to the general public. The hopes was to not only captivate the public with the
beauty of modernist houses but also with their functionality, affordability and
liveability.

Sources: http://www.nps.gov/nhl/designations/samples/CA/Eames.pdfSummarizes the Eames House in the context of domestic postwar housing including construction, location, and origins.

Purpose:

The Eames House was designed as part of the Arts and Architecture Magazine Case Study House series. In the original annoucement , the objective of the experiment was explained to be an investigation into post-war housing and designs using the mass of material that had accumulated as a result of the wartime years. There were originally 8 houses purposed (it expanded to 34). The houses were going to be open for public tours and were going to explore the perfect living accommodations for each architect's respective lifestyles and would work on a specific living problem in California. Each architect was faced with a particular problem and their design had to fit within a specific budget. By no means were the Case Study Houses meant to be a stage for an individual "performance", and each house had to be capable of duplication. As well they must try to use prefabricated pieces from companies to build these homes. The first set of plans for the Eames House was published in the magazine in December 1945. Due to war shortage and the Eames deepening connection to the land, the design was rethought and the goals became: not destroy the meadow, maximize the volume with minimal material, to use the same parts (however they did order more steel beams). Also privacy and integrating the house into the landscape were valued. After its construction its purpose resulted in affecting architecture around the world. It is an architectural icon now and is preserved, maintained and tours are available through The Eames Foundation, created by Charles’s daughter, Lucia Eames, in 2004.Sources: http://www.artsandarchitecture.com/case.houses/pdf01/csh_announcement.pdfThe original announcement to the Case Study Project in Arts and Architecture Magazine

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A detailed investigation into Case Study House # 8

"What man has learned about himself in the last five years will, we are sure, express itself in the way in which he will want to be housed in the future. Only one thing will stop the realization of that wish and that is the tenacity with which man clings to old forms because he does not yet understand the new"